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Piccoli Wealth Management

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Address 600, boul. de Maisonneuve Ouest Bureau 3050 Montreal QC, H3A 3J2
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James Piccoli

June 12, 2024

Money Education Financial literacy Social media Economy
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Brain with visible biases

How your brain hurts your investments

Cognitive biases are systematic patterns of deviation from norm or rationality in judgment, often stemming from the brain's attempt to simplify information processing. Understanding cognitive biases is crucial as they can often influence financial decision-making. Working with a wealth advisor can provide an impartial sounding board that can help reveal some cognitive biases at play.

 

These usually include:

 

Confirmation Bias:

People tend to favor information that confirms their existing beliefs or values. In the context of wealth advisory, clients might prefer data that supports their investment decisions, potentially leading to biased assessments. This is particularly relevant considering that most people get news and information fed by social media algorithms, which are designed to feed you information that you agree with and want to read.

 

Loss Aversion:

This bias refers to the tendency to prefer avoiding losses rather than acquiring equivalent gains. In financial planning, clients may be more averse to potential losses than excited about potential gains, impacting their risk tolerance. This is the most obvious and common cognitive bias when considering your own investments.

 

Overconfidence Bias:

Individuals may overestimate their own abilities or knowledge, leading to overly optimistic predictions. In wealth advisory, clients might be overly confident in their investment decisions, overlooking potential risks. Think of the Dunning-Kruger effect.

 

Anchoring Bias:

This involves relying too heavily on the first piece of information encountered when making decisions. In financial planning, clients might anchor their expectations based on initial market conditions, or past investment performance. Exploring an individual’s early relationship with money and investments is a vital part of our process for this reason.

 

Availability Heuristic:

People tend to rely on readily available information rather than seeking out all relevant facts. In wealth advisory, clients might make decisions based on recent market trends or news without considering the broader context. Having access to reliable experts and sources of information is crucial to avoiding this bias.

 

Herd Mentality:

The tendency to follow the actions of a larger group, even if it contradicts one's own beliefs. In the financial world, this can lead to market bubbles or crashes as individuals follow the crowd without independent analysis. Social media has turbocharged this particular bias, as forums and groups of people are more connected than ever and vulnerable to groupthink.

 

Understanding and recognizing these biases is crucial for us, as it can help in providing more informed advice and assisting our clients in making decisions that align with their long-term financial goals.

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CIBC Private Wealth” consists of services provided by CIBC and certain of its subsidiaries through CIBC Private Banking; CIBC Private Investment Counsel, a division of CIBC Asset Management Inc. (“CAM”); CIBC Trust Corporation; and CIBC Wood Gundy, a division of CIBC World Markets Inc. (“WMI”). CIBC Private Banking provides solutions from CIBC Investor Services Inc. (“ISI”), CAM and credit products. CIBC Private Wealth services are available to qualified individuals. Insurance services are only available through CIBC Wood Gundy Financial Services Inc. In Quebec, insurance services are only available through CIBC Wood Gundy Financial Services (Quebec) Inc.


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